acm-header
Sign In

Communications of the ACM

ACM Careers

WSU Project Aims to Hire and Retain More Women, Minority STEM Faculty


View as: Print Mobile App Share:
Wichita State University

Credit: KSN

Women currently hold six out of 10 dean positions throughout Wichita State University. Now WSU is taking steps to increase the number of women and minorities among its faculty with a $300,000 grant from the U.S. National Science Foundation.

The grant funds an 18-month project to improve the university's hiring and retention of women and minority faculty, particularly in STEM fields.

Among the many benefits of having a more diverse faculty are the ability to serve a growing diverse student body and surrounding community, and to support greater innovation.

"Students are inspired by teachers who look like them, and diverse groups are more productive, more innovative and have better outcomes. Everyone benefits," says Janet Twomey, associate dean of the College of Engineering and Principle Investigator of the project.

The multidisciplinary team leading the initiative is also comprised of Davis Wright, Linnea Glenmaye, Jean Griffith, David Eichhorn, Moriah Beck, Gery Markova.

WSU faculty will be asked to participate in a faculty satisfaction survey, and female STEM faculty will participate in focus groups, all with the goal of learning more about existing struggles to advancing their careers as faculty and what the university can do to increase diversity in hiring.

"The university has made great progress in terms of recruiting and retaining a diverse student body, and now we're taking major steps to do the same for faculty in leadership positions," Twomey says.


 

No entries found

Sign In for Full Access
» Forgot Password? » Create an ACM Web Account